GRANICUS
''THIEVES, LIARS, AND TRAITORS''
2010
59:28
1/Thieves, Liars, and Traitors
Woody Leffel/2:47
2/Space In Time
Woody Leffel/4:57
3/Equator
Woody Leffel/3:16
4/I'm Not Sick
Woody Leffel/4:03
5/Hollywood Star
Woody Leffel/3:18
6/Wizard of Was
Woody Leffel/4:36
7/Taste of Love
Woody Leffel/3:38
8/Slings and Arrows
Woody Leffel/5:53
9/When You're Movin'/Back Seat of My Car/Bad Talk [Live Jam]
Woody Leffel/27:00
Wayne Anderson /Guitar
Joe Battaglia /Drums, Percussion
Dale Bedford /Guitar (Bass)
Artie Cashin /Guest Artist, Guitar
Woody Leffel /Harmonica, Vocals
Al Pinell /Guitar (Rhythm)
Jesse Rae /Guest Artist, Vocals
REVIEW
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Cleveland's enigmatic Granicus recorded just one eponymous LP before fading into rock & roll oblivion, but boy, it's an absolute gem! Quietly released by RCA in 1973, Granicus is truly an album out of time -- especially its own -- which perhaps explains its eventual commercial failure. Years on, the record acts as a veritable time capsule, taking the listener back to that tenuous transition point where late-'60s progressive rock and experimental psychedelia finally gave way once and for all to what is now considered the classic '70s hard rock sound. Indeed, it's this convoluted transformation process that simultaneously informs the album with its edgy, nervous energy and helps explain its mysteriously lasting appeal. Elements of the old ways pervade the wistful interlude "Twilight," the prog-tastic "Nightmare," and the 11-minute freakout "Prayer," while ballsy hard rockers like "You're in America" and "When You're Movin'" reflect the new world order imposed by the church of Led Zeppelin. Somewhere in between, an optimum balance is struck by excellent single "Bad Talk," the scorching, self-affirming tirade of "Cleveland Ohio" (where singer Woody Leffel scats his way through every insult ever aimed at his hometown's citizens: "Uncool, unheavy, ungroovy, unfunky, unhip, greaseball!"), and the amazing hard boogie workout that is closer "Paradise." As for the bandmembers, their technical prowess and taut interplay drives all of the above into truly impressive realms of inspiration, and with his piercing shrieks and bluesy falsetto, Leffel is a positively eerie sonic precursor to Rush's Geddy Lee. Rock & roll history may have dealt them a losing hand in the end, but there'll always be a place in musical anthropologists' hearts for both Granicus the band and Granicus the album.
BIOGRAPHY
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Taking their name from the river where Alexander the Great achieved his first important victory over the Persians, Cleveland Ohio's Granicus have far exceeded their ridiculously brief lifespan as a working band to gain lasting and ever-growing favor among serious collectors of obscure ‘70's hard rock. Formed at the start of the decade by singer Woody Leffel (also acoustic guitars), lead and rhythm guitarists Wayne Anderson and Al Pinelli, respectively, bassist Dale Bedford and drummer Joe Battaglia, Granicus honed their original material in Cleveland area clubs before signing to RCA Records in 1973. Boasting a surprisingly mature caliber of songwriting, their eponymous debut album of the same year offered a spirited synthesis of late-‘60's hard rock influences -- Cream, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Blue Cheer, etc. -- and early-‘70's giants-in-the-making like Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin -- particularly when it came to Leffel's high-pitched, Robert Plant-like attack. But for all its apparent merits, the LP met with little to no commercial success upon release, and, after being dropped by RCA, Granicus's dwindling career prospects eventually contributed to their break-up sometime later. For all their inherent talent, none of the band members resurfaced in other groups -- save for drummer Battaglia who was briefly associated with a New York-based band called Pandora a few years later.
''THIEVES, LIARS, AND TRAITORS''
2010
59:28
1/Thieves, Liars, and Traitors
Woody Leffel/2:47
2/Space In Time
Woody Leffel/4:57
3/Equator
Woody Leffel/3:16
4/I'm Not Sick
Woody Leffel/4:03
5/Hollywood Star
Woody Leffel/3:18
6/Wizard of Was
Woody Leffel/4:36
7/Taste of Love
Woody Leffel/3:38
8/Slings and Arrows
Woody Leffel/5:53
9/When You're Movin'/Back Seat of My Car/Bad Talk [Live Jam]
Woody Leffel/27:00
Wayne Anderson /Guitar
Joe Battaglia /Drums, Percussion
Dale Bedford /Guitar (Bass)
Artie Cashin /Guest Artist, Guitar
Woody Leffel /Harmonica, Vocals
Al Pinell /Guitar (Rhythm)
Jesse Rae /Guest Artist, Vocals
REVIEW
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Cleveland's enigmatic Granicus recorded just one eponymous LP before fading into rock & roll oblivion, but boy, it's an absolute gem! Quietly released by RCA in 1973, Granicus is truly an album out of time -- especially its own -- which perhaps explains its eventual commercial failure. Years on, the record acts as a veritable time capsule, taking the listener back to that tenuous transition point where late-'60s progressive rock and experimental psychedelia finally gave way once and for all to what is now considered the classic '70s hard rock sound. Indeed, it's this convoluted transformation process that simultaneously informs the album with its edgy, nervous energy and helps explain its mysteriously lasting appeal. Elements of the old ways pervade the wistful interlude "Twilight," the prog-tastic "Nightmare," and the 11-minute freakout "Prayer," while ballsy hard rockers like "You're in America" and "When You're Movin'" reflect the new world order imposed by the church of Led Zeppelin. Somewhere in between, an optimum balance is struck by excellent single "Bad Talk," the scorching, self-affirming tirade of "Cleveland Ohio" (where singer Woody Leffel scats his way through every insult ever aimed at his hometown's citizens: "Uncool, unheavy, ungroovy, unfunky, unhip, greaseball!"), and the amazing hard boogie workout that is closer "Paradise." As for the bandmembers, their technical prowess and taut interplay drives all of the above into truly impressive realms of inspiration, and with his piercing shrieks and bluesy falsetto, Leffel is a positively eerie sonic precursor to Rush's Geddy Lee. Rock & roll history may have dealt them a losing hand in the end, but there'll always be a place in musical anthropologists' hearts for both Granicus the band and Granicus the album.
BIOGRAPHY
by Eduardo Rivadavia
Taking their name from the river where Alexander the Great achieved his first important victory over the Persians, Cleveland Ohio's Granicus have far exceeded their ridiculously brief lifespan as a working band to gain lasting and ever-growing favor among serious collectors of obscure ‘70's hard rock. Formed at the start of the decade by singer Woody Leffel (also acoustic guitars), lead and rhythm guitarists Wayne Anderson and Al Pinelli, respectively, bassist Dale Bedford and drummer Joe Battaglia, Granicus honed their original material in Cleveland area clubs before signing to RCA Records in 1973. Boasting a surprisingly mature caliber of songwriting, their eponymous debut album of the same year offered a spirited synthesis of late-‘60's hard rock influences -- Cream, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Blue Cheer, etc. -- and early-‘70's giants-in-the-making like Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin -- particularly when it came to Leffel's high-pitched, Robert Plant-like attack. But for all its apparent merits, the LP met with little to no commercial success upon release, and, after being dropped by RCA, Granicus's dwindling career prospects eventually contributed to their break-up sometime later. For all their inherent talent, none of the band members resurfaced in other groups -- save for drummer Battaglia who was briefly associated with a New York-based band called Pandora a few years later.